| Literature DB >> 32546147 |
Mary P Tully1, Cecilia Bernsten2, Mhairi Aitken3, Caroline Vass4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are increasing examples of linking data on healthcare resource use and patient outcomes from different sectors of health and social care systems. Linked data are generally anonymised, meaning in most jurisdictions there are no legal restrictions to their use in research conducted by public or private organisations. Secondary use of anonymised linked data is contentious in some jurisdictions but other jurisdictions are known for their use of linked data. The publics' perceptions of the acceptability of using linked data is likely to depend on a number of factors. This study aimed to quantify the preferences of the public to understand the factors that affected views about types of linked data and its use in two jurisdictions.Entities:
Keywords: Preferences, discrete choice experiment, linked data
Year: 2020 PMID: 32546147 PMCID: PMC7298855 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-020-01139-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1Example of scenario choice
Attributes and Levels
| Attribute | Levels (text variation for Sweden in brackets) |
|---|---|
| The researchers are: | Only university researchers. |
| Only university researchers or NHS staff (researchers employed by a county council). | |
| Only university researchers, NHS staff or government researchers (researchers employed by a county council or researchers employed by one of the authorities). | |
| University researchers, NHS staff, government researchers (researchers employed by a county council or researchers employed by one of the authorities) and commercial researchers such as market research organisations or pharmaceutical companies.a | |
| The type of data being linked: | Information from your GP (primary care) records being linked with information from your other NHS (county council) health records e.g. hospital records. |
| Information from your NHS (county council) health records being linked with information from your social care or education records. | |
| Information from your NHS (county council) health records being linked with information from your social care or education records, or from your employment and benefits (national health insurance) records. | |
| Information from your NHS (county council) health records being linked with information from your social care, education, employment, and benefits (national health insurance) records, as well as information collected about you in the private sector e.g. through online shopping accounts. a | |
| The purpose of the research: | Research using linked information should only be conducted if it will have direct benefits for the people whose information is being used. |
| Research using linked information should only be conducted if it will have general public benefits. | |
| Research using linked information should be allowed for any reason.a | |
| Profit-Making: | Nobody should be allowed to profit from research carried out using linked information. |
| Any profit made from research carried out using linked information should be shared with the public. | |
| Any profit made from research carried out using linked information should be invested into public services. | |
| Any profit made from research carried out using linked information should be kept by those carrying out the research. a | |
| Oversight: | The process should be overseen by the Scottish (Swedish) Government. |
| The process should be overseen by a non-governmental independent body (an independent body that is not part of the Swedish Government). | |
| The process should be overseen by the relevant public service(s); for example, research that uses information from people’s health records should be overseen by the NHS (county council). | |
| The process should be overseen by the organisations undertaking the research. a |
a base level in the analysis
Characteristics of the study sample
| Characteristic | Scotland | Sweden |
|---|---|---|
| Male | 421 (41.9%) | 499 (51.2%) |
| Female | 583 (58.1%) | 475 (48.8%) |
| 18–34 years | 275 (27.4%) | 354 (36.3%) |
| 35–54 years | 358 (35.7%) | 411 (42.2%) |
| 55+ years | 371 (37.0%) | 209 (21.5%) |
| Working part or full time | 557 (55.5%) | 627 (64.3%) |
| Not working | 444 (44.2%) | 341 (35.0%) |
a missing data: Scotland (n = 3) and Sweden (n = 6)
Number of respondents routed-out after responding “data linkage should not be permitted under any circumstances” to the initial survey questions
| Initial survey questions, in order | Scotland (n) | Sweden (n) |
|---|---|---|
| Purposes of research | 67 | 51 |
| Who are the researchers | 104 | 186 |
| What types of information may be linked | 135 | 128 |
| Management of potential profits | 145 | 140 |
| Arrangements for oversight/monitoring | 8 | 5 |
| Public involvement in data linkage research | 2 | 3 |
Each question asked respondents which of the levels in Table 1 was closest to their view about the attribute (or that data linkage should not be permitted)
Results of the conditional logit model
| Attribute and level | Estimate coefficient | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Scotland | Sweden | Country comparisonb | |
| Researchers: | |||
| University researchers | 0.214*** (0.05) | 0.168** (0.05) | 0.047 (0.07) |
| University /health service staff | 0.500*** (0.05) | 0.312*** (0.05) | 0.188** (0.07) |
| University/health service staff/government | 0.445*** (0.05) | 0.337*** (0.05) | 0.108 (0.07) |
| University/health service staff/government/commercial2 | Base levela | ||
| Data to be linked: | |||
| Primary care linked to other health records | 0.918*** (0.05) | 0.706*** (0.05) | 0.212** (0.07) |
| Health records linked to social care/education records | 0.664*** (0.05) | 0.403*** (0.05) | 0.261*** (0.07) |
| Health records linked to social care/education/employment/benefits records | 0.407*** (0.05) | 0.171*** (0.05) | 0.236** (0.07) |
| Health records linked to social care/education/ employment/benefits records/private sector | Base levela | ||
| Purpose: | |||
| Direct benefits for the people whose information is used | 0.322*** (0.04) | 0.254*** (0.04) | 0.068 (0.06) |
| Research conducted if it will have general public benefits | 0.548*** (0.04) | 0.430*** (0.04) | 0.118* (0.06) |
| Research for any reason | Base levela | ||
| Profit-making: | |||
| Nobody profits | 0.326*** (0.05) | 0.171*** (0.05) | 0.156* (0.07) |
| Profit shared with the public | 0.579*** (0.05) | 0.397*** (0.05) | 0.182* (0.07) |
| Profit invested into public services | 0.739*** (0.05) | 0.506*** (0.05) | 0.233** (0.07) |
| Profit goes to those doing the research | Base levela | ||
| Oversight: | |||
| Overseen by independent body | 0.346*** (0.05) | 0.420*** (0.05) | −0.074 (0.07) |
| Overseen by relevant public service | 0.265*** (0.05) | 0.457*** (0.05) | −0.192** (0.07) |
| Overseen by Government | 0.066 (0.05) | 0.289*** (0.05) | −0.223** (0.07) |
| Overseen by the organisation undertaking the research | Base levela | ||
| Constant | 0.886*** (0.08) | 0.620*** (0.08) | 0.266* (0.12) |
| Number of observations | |||
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001
a Each attribute used categorical levels, which were dummy coded relative to a base level (Table 1) that was deemed to be the ‘worst’
b The country comparison model, estimated using pooled data using a condition logit model, included interaction terms between dummy variables that identified the respondent’s nationality (1 = Scottish) and each attribute level
Results of the heteroskedastic conditional logit model
| Attribute and level | Estimate coefficient (standard error) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Pooled data (Scotland and Sweden) | Interaction termsb | ||
| University researchers | 0.168** (0.05) | 0.001 (0.07) | |
| University /health service staff | 0.312*** (0.05) | 0.080 (0.08) | |
| University/health service staff/government | 0.337*** (0.05) | 0.012 (0.08) | |
| University/health service staff/government/commercial | Base levela | ||
| Primary care linked to other health records | 0.706*** (0.05) | 0.014 (0.11) | |
| Health records linked to social care/education records | 0.403*** (0.05) | 0.118 (0.09) | |
| Health records linked to social care/education/employment/benefits records | 0.171*** (0.05) | 0.148 (0.08) | |
| Health records linked to social care/education/ employment/benefits records/private sector | Base levela | ||
| Direct benefits for the people whose information is used | 0.253*** (0.03) | 0c | |
| Research conducted if it will have general public benefits | 0.430*** (0.04) | 0c | |
| Research for any reason | Base levela | ||
| Nobody profits | 0.171*** (0.05) | 0.086 (0.07) | |
| Profit shared with the public | 0.397*** (0.05) | 0.057 (0.08) | |
| Profit invested into public services | 0.506*** (0.05) | 0.074 (0.09) | |
| Profit goes to those doing the research | Base levela | ||
| Overseen by independent body | 0.420*** (0.05) | −0.148* (0.07) | |
| Overseen by relevant public service | 0.457*** (0.05) | −0.249*** (0.07) | |
| Overseen by Government | 0.289*** (0.05) | −0.238*** (0.07) | |
| Overseen by the organisation undertaking the research | Base levela | ||
| Constant | 0.620*** (0.08) | 0.076 (0.11) | |
| Scale term (if the respondent is Scottish) | 0.242 | (0.12) | |
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001
a Each attribute used categorical levels, which were dummy coded relative to a base level (Table 1) that was deemed to be the ‘worst’
b Interaction terms indicate the effect of being Scottish on the estimated coefficients
c The estimated model included an interaction term in which the attribute ‘purpose’ was restricted to zero
Fig. 2Probability of a scenario describing linked data being acceptable
Attribute level coding
| Attributes and levels | Labels | |
|---|---|---|
| The researchers are: | Only university researchers | RUNI |
| Only university researchers or NHS staff (researchers employed by a county council) | RUNHS | |
| Only university researchers, NHS staff or government researchers (researchers employed by a county council or researchers employed by one of the authorities) | RUNHSG | |
| University researchers, NHS staff, government researchers (researchers employed by a county council or researchers employed by one of the authorities) and commercial researchers such as market research organisations or pharmaceutical companiesa | RUNHSGP | |
| The type of data being linked: | Information from your GP (primary care) records being linked with information from your other NHS (county council) health records e.g. hospital records | INHS |
| Information from your NHS (county council) health records being linked with information from your social care or education records. | INHSE | |
| Information from your NHS (county council) health records being linked with information from your social care or education records, or from your employment and benefits (national health insurance) records. | INHSEB | |
| Information from your NHS (county council) health records being linked with information from your social care, education, employment, and benefits (national health insurance) records, as well as information collected about you in the private sector e.g. through online shopping accountsa | INHSEBX | |
| The purpose of the research: | Research using linked information should only be conducted if it will have direct benefits for the people whose information is being used. | BENEFITD |
| Research using linked information should only be conducted if it will have general public benefits. | BENEFITG | |
| Research using linked information should be allowed for any reason. a | BENEFITX | |
| Profit-Making: | Nobody should be allowed to profit from research carried out using linked information. | PROFITN |
| Any profit made from research carried out using linked information should be shared with the public. | PROFITPUB | |
| Any profit made from research carried out using linked information should be invested into public services. | PROFITINV | |
| Any profit made from research carried out using linked information should be kept by those carrying out the research. a | PROFITR | |
| Oversight: | The process should be overseen by the Scottish (Swedish) Government. | NONGOV |
| The process should be overseen by a non-governmental independent body (an independent body that is not part of the Swedish Government). | PUB | |
| The process should be overseen by the relevant public service(s); for example, research that uses information from people’s health records should be overseen by the NHS (county council). | GOV | |
| The process should be overseen by the organisations undertaking the researcha. | ORG | |
aDefined as the base level for dummy coding of the categorical levels